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Smallpox
1. Smallpox
Malakhova Anastasia2.
What Is Smallpox?Smallpox is an extremely contagious
and deadly virus for which there is
no known cure. The last known case
occurred in the United States in
1949 and due to worldwide
vaccination programs, this disease
has been completely eradicated.
Smallpox is also known as variola.
3. Symptoms
historical accounts show that when someone was infectedwith the smallpox virus, they had no symptoms for between
seven and 17 days. However, once the incubation period
(or virus development phase) was over, the following flulike symptoms occurred:
high fever
chills
headache
severe back pain
abdominal pain
vomiting
4. How it spreads
These symptoms would go away withintwo to three days. Then the patient
would feel better. However, just as the
patient started to feel better, a rash
would appear. The rash started on the
face and then spread to the hands,
forearms, and the main part of the
body. The person would be highly
contagious until the rash disappeared.
5.
Within two days of appearance, the rash woulddevelop into abscesses that filled with fluid and pus.
The abscesses would break open and scab over. The
scabs would eventually fall off, leaving pit mark scars.
Until the scabs fell off, the person remained
contagious.
6. Ways to treat
There is no cure for the smallpox virus. As a result ofworldwide, repeated vaccination programs, the variola
virus (smallpox) has been completely eradicated. The
only people considered to be at risk for smallpox are
researchers who work with it in a laboratory setting.
In the unlikely event that an exposure to the smallpox
virus occurs, vaccination within one to three days can
keep the illness from being so severe. In addition,
antibiotics can help to reduce the bacterial infections
associated with the virus.
7. Probable complications
Complications of smallpox arise most commonly in the respiratorysystem and range from simple bronchitis to fatal pneumonia.
Respiratory complications tend to develop on about the eighth day of
the illness and can be either viral or bacterial in origin. Secondary
bacterial infection of the skin is a relatively uncommon complication
of smallpox. When this occurs, the fever usually remains elevated.
Other complications include encephalitis (1 in 500 patients), which is
more common in adults and may cause temporary disability;
permanent pitted scars, most notably on the face; and complications
involving the eyes (2 percent of all cases)
8. Tips to prevent a person from catching it
In 1967, WHO began its attempt to eradicate the smallpoxvirus worldwide. The methods used in the program were
simple:
Careful surveillance for all smallpox infections worldwide, to
allow for quick diagnosis and immediate quarantine of patients.
Immediate vaccination of all contacts diagnosed with infection,
in order to interrupt the virus' usual pattern of infection.
The WHO's program was extremely successful, and the virus
was declared eradicated worldwide in May 1980.